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in-min-mr ' rsna-wopip i the weather h % Chicago and vicinity partiy 4 a , cloudy sunday with probably show g ". j ers monday fair not much change ir-jf x in temperature light to moderate njtf h9 northeasterly winds {*(^_ vol x no 49 a m Chicago examiner sunday c * * Chicago june 5 1910 sunday iiwjt thi3 edition consists of jm xgjtil t nettb . iâ€”resorts,1 â€” resorts fe'w jm)n 2 â€” cakl.js * â€” drama k m_tia bâ€”autos.8 â€” autos Â» â€” classified s"s?j4 f.l 4 â€” bpobts 10 real estate tef'fj v **| b metbopomtan finajfoia'l tj v \ society markets ffjg lt e â€” editobiai 11 magazine fim __Â£* music - 12 â€” comic fg u Â£â– Â«Â£Â£?&Â» price five cents fish man tells bunke he got and spent jack pot beards-own dealer admits-be ing with foster on night bill was killed asserts that bribery was not needed prosecutor thinks he has evi dence to indict men higher up dawson aid predicts j the legislators will escape virginia attorney said to have been lobbying against measure is summoned to appear before grand jury ibeardstown 111 june 4 revelations concerning the jackpot that was raised during the last regular session of the gen eral assembly to kill the fish bill came thick and fast to-day to-niglit almost every particle of evidence needed by state's attorney burke of sangamon county to complete his case is in the hands of that official following the testimony given by john dixon wealthy peoria fish dealer before the sangamon county grand jury earlier in the day state's attorney burke made a hurried trip to this place late in the after noon to-night frank j traut ice and fish dealer of beardstowu admitted to mr burke that he had received the 2,500 jackpot that had been raised among the fish dealers of the state for the purpose of killing the fish bill and that lie bad gpent the night on which the bill was killed iti representative a m foster of rushville i spent the money through a local newspaper nun traut sent out the following statement late to l got the jackpot money and i spent it the bill was killed without the use of money and so i did not use it the story which traut told to burke that he had taken the jackpot and spent it was not unexpected by burke and is said to be a necessary link in the web of evl i dence needed to secure the convictiou of the men higher up john dixon by bis testimony before the grand jury to-day showed absolutely that the jackpot existed and that 3,500 was msc'i by the big fish dealers of the state defeat the bill one thousand dollars u-i the money dixon said was used as ex pense money for buying wine and for en tertaining certain corpulent legislators henry lemm of pekin 111 who last night fai-nished valuable information to mr burke about the fish bill jackpot re peated bis story to the grand jury to-day and added many facts to those he had al ready related it was after the story had been told by i these two men tbat mr burke decided to come to beardstown to interview mr traut tells of paying money according to the evidence of dixon be fore the grand jury at springfield to-day , tlie brought the 1,250 of corruption money which be had collected in his section to the st nicholas hotel iu springfield wrapped up in a bi*own paper and turned it over to traut % traut admitted these facts to be true and also admitted that he had collected an 1 other 1,230 the mystery as lo what j traul did with the money is as yet un j solved nni ii will perhaps be several i days before i is cleared up but t ue ud l missions of traut that he received and helped along with dixon to collect it for the purpose of blocking legislation are sig nificant traut told the state's attorney that fos ter was obligated to him and that he i stayed with him to see that the bill was ' killed according to annals of the legislature | s the bill came up for third reading at 4 \ o'clock in the morning of the last day's ! session and was called up by foster after ! colonel nat h cohen the state fish and j game commissioner had called foster out i and as cohen told the grand jury spoken ' very plainly to him shut up browne cries other members of the legislature told the grand jury that when foster called j the bill after cohen had talked to him j , representative lee o'neil browne who i ' sat next to foster leaned over to foster snd shouted shut up the bill never came up for third reading the most significant statement by the i array of legal talent representing browne and the men higher up was made to â€¢ s day in springfield when a former judge ol the probate court clarenee j jones ol springfield now acting as a gatherer of evidence for thomas dawson told a friend they will never trace this bill to a log islator it will not get that fnr charles grindlcy an attorney from vii giuia who was said to be lobbying i â€¢Â» jffainst the passage of the fish bill hay 4w?eu summoned to appear ou monday be j fore the sangamon grand jury and tell j what he knows of the disappearance ol \ the fish jackpot the following oilic fish men or cond court rules balzac's works are excusable st paul judge on bench says even the worst of them are glassies â€¢ st i'.u'l miuu juue â– Â». judge hu hanft to-day decided that cveu the worst of balzac's works are nor iudecent ltec-'!u-*"e they are classics a cincinnati book com pany sued a f usterlind for s"i before judge hanft here to-day osterlind defend ing himself by saying the books were not expurgated as advertised and were inde cent and therefore constituted illegal mat ter under the state statutes his attorney argued that even in france ten chapters had been suppressed judge hanft ruled that eighty years of circulation bad made them excusable literature 20 hurt in polk station engine collides with crowded cars passenger may ule one man was probably fatally injured twenty or more persons were bruised and cut and a train load of passengers were badly frightened last evening when a switch engine drawing three - passenger coaches struck a waiting suburban train of the Chicago & western indiana railroad in the polk street station john w patery a switchman living at 2449 west north avenne is in the connty hossital and probably will die of the in 1 juries he received in the collision pa-tery was riding on tho front of the switch en gine when it crashed into the passenger train the suburban train which was bound for dalton was well filled the force ot the blow threw many of the passengels from their seats some were cut by flying glass the rear coach was badly demol ished benjamin young 7005 cornell avenue fireman on the switch engine was slightlv injured as was fred tadrick 486 west eightieth street engineer of the suburban passenger engine j c sibley is beaten ex-congressman of archbold letter fa*me loses at primary franklin pa june 4 joseph c sib ley ex-congressman from tlie twenty eighth pennsylvania district xiio was ex posed by w r hearst as a henchman of the standard oil companv and oue of the men prominent in the famous john d archbold letters was beaten nt the re publican primaries to-day for his former seat by nelson p wheeler present in cumbent according to midnight returns wheeler's majority will be 500 express train leaveb track wilmington del june 4 a royal blue express train from washington for new york on the baltimore & ohio rail road jumped the track at east junction south of here to-night the engine rolling down an embankment the fireman and engineer were badly injured but the passengers escaped with nothing more seri ous than a shaking up u s to aid american in clutch of madriz naval commander ordered to prevent death of w p pittham new barbarism feared expected duplication of groce and cannon affair causes the action j washington june 4 commander gil ! mer iu charge of the aniericj n naval tottxa at bfatefieids was sent a dispatch this aft ernoon iiy the state depart nicif-l that ma driz must not be allowed lo execute v:i ! hani p pitlhnm an american citizen under illegal arrest and about to be tried by a drumhead court-martial n cablegrams have alsy been sent u the i uuited states consul at managua for trans j mission to president madriz and to the i american consulate at bluefields pitthnm is accused ef the same offense as ithal for which groce and cannon were ex i ecuted by zelaya that execution was de iclared by the state department to be an act of barbarity and was the cause of the exiling of zelaya from nicaragua the mere fact that the oi-ganizution under the control of madriz is not regarded as a government by the uultejjj states excludes the possibility of madriz making the claim that pittham was in rebellion against the established government tbt rase is therefore infinitely stronger than that of groce and cannon and for that reason commander gilmer may go to the extent of dispersing the court-martial the official dispatch as given out was as follows : â€” there is a newspaper report from san luan del sur to the effect that william p pittham an american citizen who is al leged to have laid mines while operating with the estrada forces has been made prisoner by the madriz forces and is about to be tried by court-martial it is unnecessary to point out that this government will jealously scrutinize thf treatment accorded him which must be humane and regular you will immediately make inquiry and report to ihe state de partmeut afternoon dispatches to the state de partment show that the forces of mad have baen completely routed at rama and that the esrradists are pursuing the re treating madriz forces elopers face deportation mrs anna fabian who left her husband in austria and with her two children came to america with joseph pross was ar rested hei'e with pross by immigration of ficers yesterday an effort will be made lo deport them hospital fired by bolt if lightning seventy patients imperiled by shock at rhodes avenue women's institution thrown into hysterics operating room damaged by current and blaze nearby building also struck seventy juiiieuts n majority of them women were severely sliocfeil mid thrown ium ; i penic ul 4r hist niilit when with i ilful'eniup ' cnisli lightning struck the i rhodes avejme w<jtaen"s hospital thirty ! sf<-oi!<l street and rhodes avenue setting j fire lo the building it struck the operating room on the j third flour where only i few minutes i previously dr i m doyle had performed ian emergency operation the i-oncussiou broke every pane of glass j ; in the skylight arching the operating rooms and set toe to the woodwork patients on all three floors of the hos pital received shocks and nurses had much difficulty in quieting many who became hysterical arrival of firemen summoned hurriedly from a nearby engine house did not serve to quiet the alarm fortunately the flames had a poor start and were quickly subdued had the op erating rooms been occupied when the lightning fell fatalities in all probability would have resulted many of the patients in the rhodes ave niie women's hospital are maternity cases superintendent doyle said after the acci dent that nona of the patients would bej likely to feel any ill effects from the shock \ about five minutes after the hospital was struck n bÂ«h of lightning struck the roof of a four-story flat building at 350 east thirty-first street less than two blocks dis tant tearing a huge hole in the cornice and throwing bricks to the sidewalk occupants of the building were panic stricken and rushed into the street to see what had happened no one was injured however and there was no flre the duui i;e wi be covered by 200 o henry critically ill writer is hiiciaied on condition dnngrerons new tork june 4 william sidney porter better known by his pen name o henry the friend of every man and woman who loves short stories is lying in a crit ical condition in the polyclinic hospital | his wife has ween telegraphed for and has sent word that she left her home iu south carolina this afternoon to be with her hus band mr porter was operated upon fri j lay night by dr charles russell hancock j and the surgeon states t'hat he believes his ! patient is in a dangerous condition anna held willing to divorce ziefeld by vance thompson special cable to the examiner if my husband wants to wed again i'm agreeable says the actress paris june 4 paris vtai stirred to day by the repoi't that anna held a had j made np her mind that she had had j enough of man-ted life and had sought a i divorce frora florence ziegfeld j the examiner correspondent found her in the flat iu the faubourg saint honore which she has kept during the fifteen years of her career in america and to which she no returns for an indefinite period mme held said i am not applylngg for a divorce and i have not heard that mr ziegfeld is of course i do not know what the future will bring i have had several offers of mar riage two from men of title since my re turn wien they heard that i had-$1,000 000 all wanted to marry me they made i me feel like a real american heiress who was wanted for her money and not for herself willing to grant divorce i have heard miss lorraine's name men tioned in connection with ziegfeld she plays in the revue for my husbandâ€”in deed i advised him to engage her because she has talent mr shubert told me that ziegfeld wanted to marry her but i think he said so in order to make me jealous if ziegfeld wants to marry miss lorraine 1 will say so sorry but he can have his divorce ziegfeld says he loves me but french novelists like bourget say that a man cau j ! iore two women at the same time l rfon't ! know ziegfeld and myself have been prac tically living apart for a long time at i first he managed only me and we were always together tiien he took on other shows and we were apart favors experimental marriages it was i who taught ziegfeld how to ran a french revue i gave him the paris idea when he left me alone i was too proud to ask him not to stay so much a.vaj from me now i hare given him the idea of starting los follies bergeres in new york if he does that i will return whether i am divorced or not i like the idea advanced by mrs her bert parsons of experimental marriages this would be better than having a sudden marriage followed by a hasty divorce whatever happens i do not want to buy j a nobleman i should feel like those amer ican widows who buy foreign titles with the money of their dead american hus bands xew york june 4 l'm glad of the chance to thrash out this divorce talk and i hope i will do it once and for all said florence ziegfeld to-night you cannot deny it too strongly anna held miss lillian lorraine * perry belmont perry belmont indorses stand of mr hearst says eooope is changing opinion of roosevelt declares that a great service was per formed in placing the former president's attitude abroad in a clear and forcible manner before the american people vatican had best information events have justified the wisdom of rome pef * haps cairo speech served as an indication of \ what might have happened in italy had the hospitality of the holy see been accorded him pbel i paris i on the i letter of i on i guildhall i has a i mr i roosevelt'iwattitude in i ami forcible manner be i may be i exists h is one is i as representing coun i be to ac u even he i holds no which i to i for the his i as hearst i wish i europe that i our re i turn as soon possible i a great i who prefer he i a lib i eral europe is reversing i its judgment of him it must be borne in mind that this judgment was formed largely from the impression created by the systematic activity of the famous literary bureau of which mr roosevelt himself is the head its agents began in france by privately spreading the report among the leading journalists that mr roosevelt would certainly be the next president as soon as mr Taft could make way for him in deed so widely was this report put about that one impftrtant french political writer spoke of him as the diaz of the united states who was to return to the occupancy of the presidency the truth as to his acttial position was made known through diplo matic channels to the respective governments with one well known ex ception better advised than any of the other great powers of europe was the vatican events especftfffy thfs last pronouncement in london of extreme imperialism have justified the wisdom of rome perhaps the speech in cairo served as an indication of what might have happened in rome had the hospitality at the holy see been accorded liim what mr roosevelt affirmed in cairo he repeated in harsher term in london the old cynical phrase that the only good indian is a dead indian may have inspired the suggestive policy for egypt conflicts with american democracy this is in conflict with american democracy and the older democ racy of every church in christendom a the republican administration during mr roosevelt's own la am cumbency of the presidency chieflythrough mr taft's wise conduct ot___u affairs in the philippines recognized that in remoter and less civilizeti-b parts of the world the missionaries of the catholic church have led^^b the ignorant and^savage races to higher development and'taore orderly government ' by carrying out the fundamental principles of humanity the guildhall speech is a deliberate alignment with the reaction ary influences of europe in direct opposition to liberalism everywhere it fully justifies what mr hearst wrote from london that mr roose velt was the first aspirant to imperialism in the united states and be lieves in personal government so accept him the conflict which will be decided by the american people is tho conflict between the believers in government by the people of the peo ple and for the people and those who prefer to imagine the united states is in need of one msn to govern it if a man on horseback were ever needed he should have the attributes of a soldier ' slighting of spain criticised - mr he*arst refers to the part which the spanish mother country is now taking in the centenai-y of argentine independence since our war with spain which removed from the american continent the re maining vestiges of s'panish authority the sentiment of spanish amer ica for the mother country has been remarkable spain responding to this sentiment sends as a special ambassador to buenos ayres o rep resent the participation of spain in the celebration the aunt of the present king the infanta isabella when our civil war was over the generals officers and soldiers on either side were first to show mutual consideration had mr roose velt been inspired by similar soldierly feelings his first act as presi dent would have been such as to make inevitable a visit to spain dur ing his journey through europe a chivalrous people and a king who personifies that spirit would have received him with the greatest possi ble consideration envoys would have been assisted the efforts of our state department of the bureau of american republics of the special envoys and delegates to south and central america would have been greatly assisted in lmpressii3g upon their governments and people the sincerity of our policy in regard to them europe is benefiting by the unfortunate circumstance that mr roosevelt proved himself lacking in qualities which would have strength ened the ties of mutual fri ndship betvefflj tho united si alee and span ish-speaking nations th extreme ty of british iiat-viallsm ua it was defined la the continued fflri bth page 2d column \ free coupons \ for season books \ forest park | a n"d *!, white city j also | \ b ai coupons \ \ will be found on pace 2 \ j this section i ___â– tq____v v _Â£_â– ____ issm v i jmm : p h j__m >â– ''-. ww ' m / jeÂ£m -â– â– â€¢â– www Â»&\ 3srsÂ§ss y m wv m w w over 100,880,000 copies of the Chicago examiner sold during the past 12 months , these stupendous figure re appalling and cannot be wholly com prehended even by the es-p&rienced newspaper man himself â– v these figures representh-j actual sales exceed by a very large percentage the total number of newspapers printed by all the other Chicago daily and sunday morning papers combined this phenomenal growth of the Chicago examiner has never been paralleled by any newspaper west of new york city there are many reasons for this remarkable success â€” reasons that â€¢ are readily understood by those who read the examiner in preference to other papers and reasons that spell ready money to the adver tisers who patronize the columns of the Chicago examiner the examiner's city circulation including home by carrier de livery is larger than that of all other morning papers combined the sunday Chicago examiner wlls more papers than all the other Chicago sunday papers print the examiner's circulation books are open to advertisers at all times and the following figures representing city and subu3"ban circulation - â€” ' only can be verified at any time any advertiser desires sworn statement of the daily and sunday circulation of the Chicago exam , iner in the city of Chicago and its immediate environs exclusive of country circulation for may 1910 daily sunday dailv sunday 1 268,753 17 160,803 2 150,884 18 164,<093 t 3 165,383 19 171,468 4 157,172 20 170,183 5 158,621 21 167,894 6 158,367 22 >. 273,534 7 188,495 23 159,528 8 271,604 24 168,351 â€¢ 9 159,264 25 166,487 10 160,745 26 166,894 11 160,019 27 166,137 12 160,295 28 166,613 13 159,663 29 : 273,929 14 161,084 30 128,807 15 274,496 31 . 170,703 16 160,861 total 4,216,814 1,362,316 % Â» average daily city circulation may 1910 , 162,185 average sunday city circulation may 1910 272,453 w s macdonald being duly sworn deposes and says that he is the circulation manager of the Chicago examiner and that the above figures are true and that the city circulation of the daily and sunday examiner as stated above is net paid us iw^o-vju subscribed and sworn to before me ] y rn this 2d day of june 1910 - j notary //

in-min-mr ' rsna-wopip i the weather h % Chicago and vicinity partiy 4 a , cloudy sunday with probably show g ". j ers monday fair not much change ir-jf x in temperature light to moderate njtf h9 northeasterly winds {*(^_ vol x no 49 a m Chicago examiner sunday c * * Chicago june 5 1910 sunday iiwjt thi3 edition consists of jm xgjtil t nettb . iâ€”resorts,1 â€” resorts fe'w jm)n 2 â€” cakl.js * â€” drama k m_tia bâ€”autos.8 â€” autos Â» â€” classified s"s?j4 f.l 4 â€” bpobts 10 real estate tef'fj v **| b metbopomtan finajfoia'l tj v \ society markets ffjg lt e â€” editobiai 11 magazine fim __Â£* music - 12 â€” comic fg u Â£â– Â«Â£Â£?&Â» price five cents fish man tells bunke he got and spent jack pot beards-own dealer admits-be ing with foster on night bill was killed asserts that bribery was not needed prosecutor thinks he has evi dence to indict men higher up dawson aid predicts j the legislators will escape virginia attorney said to have been lobbying against measure is summoned to appear before grand jury ibeardstown 111 june 4 revelations concerning the jackpot that was raised during the last regular session of the gen eral assembly to kill the fish bill came thick and fast to-day to-niglit almost every particle of evidence needed by state's attorney burke of sangamon county to complete his case is in the hands of that official following the testimony given by john dixon wealthy peoria fish dealer before the sangamon county grand jury earlier in the day state's attorney burke made a hurried trip to this place late in the after noon to-night frank j traut ice and fish dealer of beardstowu admitted to mr burke that he had received the 2,500 jackpot that had been raised among the fish dealers of the state for the purpose of killing the fish bill and that lie bad gpent the night on which the bill was killed iti representative a m foster of rushville i spent the money through a local newspaper nun traut sent out the following statement late to l got the jackpot money and i spent it the bill was killed without the use of money and so i did not use it the story which traut told to burke that he had taken the jackpot and spent it was not unexpected by burke and is said to be a necessary link in the web of evl i dence needed to secure the convictiou of the men higher up john dixon by bis testimony before the grand jury to-day showed absolutely that the jackpot existed and that 3,500 was msc'i by the big fish dealers of the state defeat the bill one thousand dollars u-i the money dixon said was used as ex pense money for buying wine and for en tertaining certain corpulent legislators henry lemm of pekin 111 who last night fai-nished valuable information to mr burke about the fish bill jackpot re peated bis story to the grand jury to-day and added many facts to those he had al ready related it was after the story had been told by i these two men tbat mr burke decided to come to beardstown to interview mr traut tells of paying money according to the evidence of dixon be fore the grand jury at springfield to-day , tlie brought the 1,250 of corruption money which be had collected in his section to the st nicholas hotel iu springfield wrapped up in a bi*own paper and turned it over to traut % traut admitted these facts to be true and also admitted that he had collected an 1 other 1,230 the mystery as lo what j traul did with the money is as yet un j solved nni ii will perhaps be several i days before i is cleared up but t ue ud l missions of traut that he received and helped along with dixon to collect it for the purpose of blocking legislation are sig nificant traut told the state's attorney that fos ter was obligated to him and that he i stayed with him to see that the bill was ' killed according to annals of the legislature | s the bill came up for third reading at 4 \ o'clock in the morning of the last day's ! session and was called up by foster after ! colonel nat h cohen the state fish and j game commissioner had called foster out i and as cohen told the grand jury spoken ' very plainly to him shut up browne cries other members of the legislature told the grand jury that when foster called j the bill after cohen had talked to him j , representative lee o'neil browne who i ' sat next to foster leaned over to foster snd shouted shut up the bill never came up for third reading the most significant statement by the i array of legal talent representing browne and the men higher up was made to â€¢ s day in springfield when a former judge ol the probate court clarenee j jones ol springfield now acting as a gatherer of evidence for thomas dawson told a friend they will never trace this bill to a log islator it will not get that fnr charles grindlcy an attorney from vii giuia who was said to be lobbying i â€¢Â» jffainst the passage of the fish bill hay 4w?eu summoned to appear ou monday be j fore the sangamon grand jury and tell j what he knows of the disappearance ol \ the fish jackpot the following oilic fish men or cond court rules balzac's works are excusable st paul judge on bench says even the worst of them are glassies â€¢ st i'.u'l miuu juue â– Â». judge hu hanft to-day decided that cveu the worst of balzac's works are nor iudecent ltec-'!u-*"e they are classics a cincinnati book com pany sued a f usterlind for s"i before judge hanft here to-day osterlind defend ing himself by saying the books were not expurgated as advertised and were inde cent and therefore constituted illegal mat ter under the state statutes his attorney argued that even in france ten chapters had been suppressed judge hanft ruled that eighty years of circulation bad made them excusable literature 20 hurt in polk station engine collides with crowded cars passenger may ule one man was probably fatally injured twenty or more persons were bruised and cut and a train load of passengers were badly frightened last evening when a switch engine drawing three - passenger coaches struck a waiting suburban train of the Chicago & western indiana railroad in the polk street station john w patery a switchman living at 2449 west north avenne is in the connty hossital and probably will die of the in 1 juries he received in the collision pa-tery was riding on tho front of the switch en gine when it crashed into the passenger train the suburban train which was bound for dalton was well filled the force ot the blow threw many of the passengels from their seats some were cut by flying glass the rear coach was badly demol ished benjamin young 7005 cornell avenue fireman on the switch engine was slightlv injured as was fred tadrick 486 west eightieth street engineer of the suburban passenger engine j c sibley is beaten ex-congressman of archbold letter fa*me loses at primary franklin pa june 4 joseph c sib ley ex-congressman from tlie twenty eighth pennsylvania district xiio was ex posed by w r hearst as a henchman of the standard oil companv and oue of the men prominent in the famous john d archbold letters was beaten nt the re publican primaries to-day for his former seat by nelson p wheeler present in cumbent according to midnight returns wheeler's majority will be 500 express train leaveb track wilmington del june 4 a royal blue express train from washington for new york on the baltimore & ohio rail road jumped the track at east junction south of here to-night the engine rolling down an embankment the fireman and engineer were badly injured but the passengers escaped with nothing more seri ous than a shaking up u s to aid american in clutch of madriz naval commander ordered to prevent death of w p pittham new barbarism feared expected duplication of groce and cannon affair causes the action j washington june 4 commander gil ! mer iu charge of the aniericj n naval tottxa at bfatefieids was sent a dispatch this aft ernoon iiy the state depart nicif-l that ma driz must not be allowed lo execute v:i ! hani p pitlhnm an american citizen under illegal arrest and about to be tried by a drumhead court-martial n cablegrams have alsy been sent u the i uuited states consul at managua for trans j mission to president madriz and to the i american consulate at bluefields pitthnm is accused ef the same offense as ithal for which groce and cannon were ex i ecuted by zelaya that execution was de iclared by the state department to be an act of barbarity and was the cause of the exiling of zelaya from nicaragua the mere fact that the oi-ganizution under the control of madriz is not regarded as a government by the uultejjj states excludes the possibility of madriz making the claim that pittham was in rebellion against the established government tbt rase is therefore infinitely stronger than that of groce and cannon and for that reason commander gilmer may go to the extent of dispersing the court-martial the official dispatch as given out was as follows : â€” there is a newspaper report from san luan del sur to the effect that william p pittham an american citizen who is al leged to have laid mines while operating with the estrada forces has been made prisoner by the madriz forces and is about to be tried by court-martial it is unnecessary to point out that this government will jealously scrutinize thf treatment accorded him which must be humane and regular you will immediately make inquiry and report to ihe state de partmeut afternoon dispatches to the state de partment show that the forces of mad have baen completely routed at rama and that the esrradists are pursuing the re treating madriz forces elopers face deportation mrs anna fabian who left her husband in austria and with her two children came to america with joseph pross was ar rested hei'e with pross by immigration of ficers yesterday an effort will be made lo deport them hospital fired by bolt if lightning seventy patients imperiled by shock at rhodes avenue women's institution thrown into hysterics operating room damaged by current and blaze nearby building also struck seventy juiiieuts n majority of them women were severely sliocfeil mid thrown ium ; i penic ul 4r hist niilit when with i ilful'eniup ' cnisli lightning struck the i rhodes avejme wâ– ''-. ww ' m / jeÂ£m -â– â– â€¢â– www Â»&\ 3srsÂ§ss y m wv m w w over 100,880,000 copies of the Chicago examiner sold during the past 12 months , these stupendous figure re appalling and cannot be wholly com prehended even by the es-p&rienced newspaper man himself â– v these figures representh-j actual sales exceed by a very large percentage the total number of newspapers printed by all the other Chicago daily and sunday morning papers combined this phenomenal growth of the Chicago examiner has never been paralleled by any newspaper west of new york city there are many reasons for this remarkable success â€” reasons that â€¢ are readily understood by those who read the examiner in preference to other papers and reasons that spell ready money to the adver tisers who patronize the columns of the Chicago examiner the examiner's city circulation including home by carrier de livery is larger than that of all other morning papers combined the sunday Chicago examiner wlls more papers than all the other Chicago sunday papers print the examiner's circulation books are open to advertisers at all times and the following figures representing city and subu3"ban circulation - â€” ' only can be verified at any time any advertiser desires sworn statement of the daily and sunday circulation of the Chicago exam , iner in the city of Chicago and its immediate environs exclusive of country circulation for may 1910 daily sunday dailv sunday 1 268,753 17 160,803 2 150,884 18 164,<093 t 3 165,383 19 171,468 4 157,172 20 170,183 5 158,621 21 167,894 6 158,367 22 >. 273,534 7 188,495 23 159,528 8 271,604 24 168,351 â€¢ 9 159,264 25 166,487 10 160,745 26 166,894 11 160,019 27 166,137 12 160,295 28 166,613 13 159,663 29 : 273,929 14 161,084 30 128,807 15 274,496 31 . 170,703 16 160,861 total 4,216,814 1,362,316 % Â» average daily city circulation may 1910 , 162,185 average sunday city circulation may 1910 272,453 w s macdonald being duly sworn deposes and says that he is the circulation manager of the Chicago examiner and that the above figures are true and that the city circulation of the daily and sunday examiner as stated above is net paid us iw^o-vju subscribed and sworn to before me ] y rn this 2d day of june 1910 - j notary //